Sensitivity of polycrystal plasticity to slip system kinematic hardening laws for Al 7075-T6

Date

2017-01-22

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0921-5093

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Conor Hennessey, Gustavo M. Castelluccio, David L. McDowell, Sensitivity of polycrystal plasticity to slip system kinematic hardening laws for Al 7075-T6, Materials Science and Engineering: A, Volume 687, 27 February 2017, Pages 241-248

Abstract

The prediction of formation and early growth of microstructurally small fatigue cracks requires use of constitutive models that accurately estimate local states of stress, strain, and cyclic plastic strain. However, few research efforts have attempted to systematically consider the sensitivity of overall cyclic stress-strain hysteresis and higher order mean stress relaxation and plastic strain ratcheting responses introduced by the slip system back-stress formulation in crystal plasticity, even for face centered cubic (FCC) crystal systems. This paper explores the performance of two slip system level kinematic hardening models using a finite element crystal plasticity implementation as a User Material Subroutine (UMAT) within ABAQUS (Abaqus unified FEA, 2016) [1], with fully implicit numerical integration. The two kinematic hardening formulations aim to reproduce the cyclic deformation of polycrystalline Al 7075-T6 in terms of both macroscopic cyclic stress-strain hysteresis loop shape, as well as ratcheting and mean stress relaxation under strain- or stress-controlled loading with mean strain or stress, respectively. The first formulation is an Armstrong-Frederick type hardening-dynamic recovery law for evolution of the back stress [2]. This approach is capable of reproducing observed deformation under completely reversed uniaxial loading conditions, but overpredicts the rate of cyclic ratcheting and associated mean stress relaxation. The second formulation corresponds to a multiple back stress Ohno-Wang type hardening law [3] with nonlinear dynamic recovery. The adoption of this back stress evolution law greatly improves the capability to model experimental results for polycrystalline specimens subjected to cycling with mean stress or strain. The relation of such nonlinear dynamic recovery effects are related to slip system interactions with dislocation substructures.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Aluminum, Crystal plasticity, Cyclic loading

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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